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The mortgage market in Shelby County ended 2014 in a slighter better position than where it stood in 2013.

Banks and mortgage lenders made 8,471 purchase mortgages in Shelby County during 2014, up 2 percent from the 8,301 mortgages during 2013, according to the latest data from real estate information company Chandler Reports,www.chandlerreports.com.

Lipscomb & Pitts was founded on Oct. 1, 1954, by Mathew Lipscomb Jr. and John Pitts, both veterans of World War II who had come home to become the top two sales leaders in the southeast for Liberty Mutual Insurance Co.

The restaurant group with its distinctive burgers, checkered tablecloths and toothpick-filled ceilings is opening a restaurant in Germantown in about five months – the eighth Huey’s and the first new one in a decade.

The owners of Club 152 in the Beale Street entertainment district are due in Shelby County General Sessions Environmental Court Monday, May 20, for the first hearing on the injunction that closed the popular nightspot Thursday afternoon as a public nuisance.

Cushman & Wakefield/Commercial Advisors Asset Services LLC is on a roll, picking up various leasing and management assignments that have brought its office and industrial involvement to 17.8 million square feet.

With the recent completion of Memphis Invest LLC’s office space expansion for its sister company, Premier Property Management Group, and new implementation of traditional rehab services for those wanting to remodel their home, the family-owned company continues to do the majority of its business with out-of-town investors.

The bed came with a view of a sparkling Mississippi River on a winter day that was about 10 degrees on the warm side of crisp. The trees were bare and no one appeared to be at home near the concrete floodwall that ends just south of The Pyramid.

The latest sales numbers show the Downtown condominium market is making a slow and steady recovery, but perhaps the most telling sign that things are improving can be gleaned from a recent deal brokered by real estate agent Jason Durston.

Aviators attain flight and control the movements of their aircraft by precisely balancing the forces of lift, thrust, drag and gravity. The people piloting the aerotropolis initiative – the promotion of Memphis’ economy focused on the airport, other transportation assets and the connectivity among them – are negotiating their own set of physics in hopes of becoming airborne.

Aviators attain flight and control the movements of their aircraft by precisely balancing the forces of lift, thrust, drag and gravity. The people piloting the aerotropolis initiative – the promotion of Memphis’ economy focused on the airport, other transportation assets and the connectivity among them – are negotiating their own set of physics in hopes of becoming airborne.

Hope and despair have co-existed for a long time along the stretch of Poplar Avenue between Danny Thomas Boulevard and Decatur Street. And for the past two years, the area has seen more change than just about any other inner-city avenue in Memphis.

The state of Tennessee has sold the $1.3 million Midtown home once used to house the chancellor of the University of Tennessee Health Science Center.

The state transferred ownership of the two-story, nearly 6,000-square-foot home near Overton Park to a limited liability company at the end of March for $850,000. That price is about 65 percent of the home’s appraisal.

On the presidential campaign trail, it’s an issue raised as part of daily talking points, economic proposals and stinging attacks against the opposing party’s record.

But in Memphis and Shelby County, the growing number of home foreclosures is more than an abstract concept. It is a drama that threatens to upset the area’s economic structure when it comes to property tax revenue and next year’s countywide property reappraisal, among other things.

130 years ago this week, two Episcopalian nuns arrived in Memphis from New York on a journey that would become part of the city’s history. It also became a part of the tradition of the Episcopal Church.

Upon entering Dena Walley’s salon along the Highland Strip near the University of Memphis, customers are sure to notice colorful walls, unique decorations hanging from the rafters and a hand-painted floor greeting telling them to “Have a Great Hair Day!”

The Alliance for Nonprofit Excellence will host "An Inside Look at Corporate Funding" today from 9 a.m. to noon at the Memphis Jewish Community Center, 6560 Poplar Ave. For more information or to register, contact April DeBerry at 684-6605 or adeberry@npexcellence.org.

The transformation has taken several years, been kept on track with the cooperation of the public and private sectors and will have required an investment of more than $200 million once it's all said and done.

Compared to the previous two years, building permit filings were down in the second quarter 2006, according to The Daily News Online, www.memphisdailynews.com.

During that period, 3,040 total building permits were filed with the Memphis-Shelby County Department of Construction Code Enforcement (DCCE). The permits include everything from storage sheds to large residential projects.

Ted Sullivan, general manager of Gus's Fried Chicken at 310 S. Front St., couldn't see the future of the neighborhood surrounding his restaurant when Gus's opened almost five years ago.

"When we first went in here, we had no idea the Forum was going in. That has brought us enormous amounts of business," Sullivan said. "You add in all these new houses and then condos across the street and on both sides, and we're going to have so many people down here - and it can do nothing but help us out."

The University of Memphis College of Communication and Fine Arts presents the 23rd Annual Juried Student Exhibition at the art museum in the Communication and Fine Arts Building. The exhibit runs through Feb. 22. Admission is free. Call 678-2224 for more information.

This fall, athletes at Memphis University School will do battle with their rivals in a gleaming, $4.5 million sports complex.

Construction is under way on a new sports stadium for MUS, and work should be completed by the time fans arrive for the school's 2006-2007 football season opener against Montgomery Bell Academy Sept. 1. The new complex will replace rusted stands, an out-of-date press box and inadequate restroom and concession facilities.

44. Archived Article: Marketplace - Monday, April 29, 2002 Fight demand crosses river boundary Fight forces Mid-South to do some fancy footwork By SUE PEASE The Daily News While the highly anticipated "rumble on the river" has raised demand through the roof for Downtown hoteliers, the need for hot...

45. Archived Article: Marketplace - Monday, March 04, 2002 Has Father Time caught up with Time & Temp Time & Temperature stands the test of technology By SUE PEASE The Daily News As recent events can attest, the weather in Memphis can change on a dime balmy and warm in the morning and close to snow ...

46. Archived Article: Gov't Bott - Friday, July 30, 1999 A project that will close a gap on the north side of Court Square will be considered by the Design Review Board at its meeting Wednesday Court Square project would consolidate Burch Porter By KATHLEEN BURT The Daily News A project that would close a...

49. Archived Article: Law Gibbons - Thursday, October 24, 1996 Notes Bill Gibbons From policy to prosecution New district attorney will focus on causes, deterrence and punishment By GABRIELLE C.L. SONGE The Daily News County Commissioner William Lockhart Gibbons is one week away from being sworn in as the chief...